Sunday, 8 June 2025

FLAGS ON POLES-TAKEN FOR GRANTED

Taken for granted, the corner flag on a pole is a necessity to any game of football. It marks out the extremities of the pitch and has done that since 1863 when the laws were set by the FA.

Included also, were flags on poles planted four yards either side of the goal posts, on the goal line (as you would see in Aussie Rules) but only 5 feet high, as now. The central poles marked the goal and the side poles were there to help award a "rouge" which was a like a try.

If the ball didn't go through the goal but was touched down through the side gaps then this counted as a "rouge", worth a "point" and the number of points came into play when there was a tie on goals. The rouge was established by the Etonians in their own game.

In 1868 the Sheffield Rules got rid of the "rouge" opting instead for a goal kick or a corner kick when the ball went out of play behind the goal line. The FA bowed to the Sheffield Rules in 1872 and adopted the corner and flag, also marking a quadrant one yard in radius set in 1875.

Some times there are flags place one yard off the touchline at the half way line to help the referee with "where is the half way line" decisions!

Clubs that have won the FA Cup are entitled to have a triangular flag on their poles. Otherwise it is a square flag allowed to blow in the wind. I'm not sure anyone takes any notice of this!

I am sure that when there was a corner the majority of the ball had to be inside the quadrant? Now the ball overlaps the line of the quadrant by centimetres!

The small markings on the goal line and touchline to make sure defending players don't encroach closer than 10 yards at a corner are measured from the quadrant line of course.

Corners were regarded as "indirect" until June 1924, so direct goals could not be scored direct from a corner until then. Along came Billy Alston of St Bernards FC, who scored the first legal "direct from a corner goal" in August 1924. 

What about W.H. (Billy) Smith of Huddersfield Town, who scored direct from a corner kick against Arsenal? In August 1924, in the Football League; the flood gates were open! 
Town won 4-0 and later won the League Championship. Smith made 574 apps for Town and scored 126 goals, one directly...well you know that....

Smith got himself sent off for fighting against a Stoke player in a league match and this caused him to be banned from played in the 1920 FA Cup Final; Town lost 1-0 to Aston Villa.

In the 1922 FA Cup Final at Stamford Bridge, Billy scored twice against Preston NE, one a disputed penalty, won by Smith, whom newsreel confirmed, was fouled outside the penalty area. Smith also scored twice in his last game ever v Sheffield Utd in February 1934. 
He then player-managed at Rochdale for a while, 1934-5. 

Born in Tantobie, County Durham in 1895, he died in 1951, from cancer following an "injury" in the game, which resulted in a leg amputation. His son, Conway, played at Town between 1945-51 and his grandson, Robert, played in the last ever game at Leeds Road in 1994. 
Billy also played for England three times between 1922-8. Both Billy and Conway are recorded as scoring 100 goals each in their career.

Willie Davies scored for Cardiff City in the final minute of the FA Cup Rd 4 tie against Leicester City in March 1925, making it 2-1. Cardiff went on the lose in the final to Sheffield Utd.

Thank heavens, the corner post is a flexible thing and not the solid wooden specimen of past seasons, some were square and with dangerous edges! Tosh Chamberlain, a bandy legged Fulham left winger, was renowned for sometimes kicking the flag pole when taking a corner and there have been others who push the post on an angle to allow a full bodied approach, or even pull the pole out of the ground. Referees would stop play and put the flag back into the perpendicular.

Tosh was a real character who postponed his wedding so that he could play for Fulham against Newcastle Utd in a 4th Round FA Cup tie, in which he scored a hat trick but Fulham lost 4-5! he played almost his entire career at Fulham and went to Dover and then Gravesend before he retired.

When Barry Fry was manager of Birmingham City in 1993 he had not won more than two games in fifteen during his first 3 months. Finding that a local "Romany" family had cursed the ground way back, he had the curse removed, by getting a local Romany to pee on each corner post and without taking the "piss", his team began to gain success, winning the next 7 out of 10. and IF YOU CAN LOAD THIS....

https://www.tiktok.com/@footychants_efl/video/7510549867643604246

Thursday, 5 June 2025

GEORGIA v FAROE ISLANDS

Today, Thursday, June 5, as part of the 2024/2026 Season Friendlies, Georgia will face the Faroe Islands in an eagerly anticipated fixture. BUT  the next home fixture in the Nations' League for the Georgian team will be played without spectators



UEFA has fined the Georgian Football Federation €40,000 and ordered one "competitive"home match to be played without fans due to the indecent behaviour of supporters during the match against Armenia, which took place on March 23 in Tbilisi (6:1). Georgian fans invaded the pitch and subsequently threw bottles towards Armenian supporters and used pyrotechnics. Naughty! The ban will apply to the first home match of the 2026/27 Nations League season, meaning it will not affect the qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup.

Looking at recent form, Georgia has secured two wins, one draw, and suffered two defeats in their last five games. Meanwhile, the Faroe Islands have recorded one victory, one draw, and three losses over the same period. It is also worth noting that in nearly all recent encounters involving Georgia and the Faroe Islands, the total goals scored have been two or fewer. Here's map!




























Wednesday, 4 June 2025

NO DUCKS AT AYLESBURY(apologies for some poor editing!)

 England warmed up for Euro 88 in match organised by a Fleet Street sports' journalist June 3. England were preparing to head for Germany to compete in the UEFA European Championship, so they warmed up with a match in June 1988 against Aylesbury United – who remain the only non-league side to ever face the Three Lions. Here’s how the unusual friendly fixture came about… By Philip Barker

The Bucks Herald reports on the build-up to the match in June 1988. Many will expect great things when England head off to the European Championship after their final warm-up matches against Bosnia Herzegovina and Iceland this week. The last time the Euros were held in Germany, an equally optimistic England side played a final warm-up match organised by a journalist. The year was 1988 and England, then managed by Bobby Robson, had qualified without losing a match. A few days before they flew out, England’s destination was Buckingham Road, home of Aylesbury United, nicknamed “The Ducks”. The Bucks Herald Newspaper, published in Aylesbury, revealed that the match came about thanks to an “unlikely scenario of a top Fleet Street journalist, the England manager and the Aylesbury United chairman.”  The journalist in question was Frank McGhee, former star writer for the Daily Mirror and later for The Observer. He lived at nearby Weston Turville and revealed how the match had come about. “Charlie Doherty, the Aylesbury United chairman, asked whether I knew Bobby Robson. “He wanted to know what chances did I think there were of getting Bobby Robson to bring an England team to Aylesbury? The initial temptation was to retort, ‘what chances? Two chances – a dog’s chance and no chance’.” Yet McGhee proposed the idea to Robson as England flew home from Turkey in the spring of 1987 after a 0–0 draw. The decision to go ahead was taken after England sealed qualification against Yugoslavia in Belgrade. England scored four times in the first 25 minutes and eventually won 4-1.
The Bucks Herald report on how the match came about....






 


Watch Aylesbury United almost catch out the England defenders with a pre-arranged free-kick routine “The high-flying Aylesbury Ducks got their expected roasting,” wrote Ken Montgomery in the Mirror.

Even so, the Bucks Herald headline proclaimed it to be “The Greatest Day”. However, Bobby Robson was already at loggerheads with some journalists. “Robson had difficulty hiding his hatred of the press and when asked perfectly acceptable questions, barked back his answers,” reported Nick Jones of the Bucks Herald. “Certainly he had many reasons to be wary of the national press but he displayed the same attitude towards the local lads.”

How the Bucks Herald reported the match The media hostility continued as England’s campaign unravelled rapidly at the Euros. They lost all three matches and were actually out before the group stages were completed. Frank McGhee died in 2000 but another Fleet Street veteran, Mike Langley, wrote a whimsical tribute for The Guardian, which recalled the day England met Aylesbury. “England manager Bobby Robson flew the same squad to Germany for the European Championship – from which they returned, beaten in their three matches by Ireland, Holland and Russia. “McGhee never said a word. Aylesbury had taken it out of our lads!”
Photos from Ken Turnbull, now Aylesbury United vice-chairman and then a volunteer with the club

Tuesday, 3 June 2025

DEEP SUSPICION-ARGIE BARGIE

Picture the FIFA World Cup 1978; its THIRD day, the 3rd of June and a referee. Brazil, the holders, were playing Sweden, the hosts, in the final minutes of the opening game of the World Cup at the Estadio Mar Del Plata, in front of 38,000. Welshman, Clive Thomas was the referee. (see below)After a few minutes in injury time, there was a corner for Brazil which Zico headed in from the right. As the ball was kicked from the corner segment, Thomas blew his whistle to end the match. The ball was in the air and time had elapsed, the injury time had been 8 seconds, apparently.  Scandolous or what??

The day before, Brazil played Sweden, Argentina, freed for a while from the despotic military junta, seemingly, had benefited from some other dubious "friendly decisions" during the tournament. The day before the Brazil-Sweden match, Argentina spent 90 minutes kicking the Hungarians off the pitch. It was however the Hungarians who had two players sent off, once they had decided to retaliate. Against France, Argentina,  benefited from a ludicrous handball decision that resulted in a penalty kick.

In Argentina's third match against Italy, the Israeli referee, Avraham Klein, was having "none of it"! Argentina lost 0-1. Klein had been  pencilled in to referee the World Cup Final but the "Junta" put enough pressure on FIFA to have him erased from the Final "programme". Argentina, by the way, had got to the final thanks to some suspect goals in a 6-0 victory over Peru. So the new referee ignored the home team's tactic of being late for the walk out onto the stadium at the beginning of the final match. Their opponents, the Dutch  were kept waiting for then minutes in the tunnel and then they complained about a bandage worn by Dutchman, Rene van de Kerkhof 's protective arm bandage...the gamemanship along with the partisan atmosphere in the El Monumental did the Dutch no favours (well you would gather that, wouldn't you?) So the Argies won 3-1 and never had a World Cup Final been viewed with so much suspicion. AND SO....Thomas' "misdemeanor" was suddenly seen in the pathetically petty light it deserved.

The 1978 FIFA World Cup in Argentina was highly controversial due to the country's military dictatorship, the "Dirty War," and allegations of match-fixing, particularly during the Argentina vs. Peru match. The tournament was used as propaganda by the military junta to legitimize itself on the world stage. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UfiRCsYEF0o


Monday, 2 June 2025

WE TOLD 'EM OLDHAM!!

We told 'em, Oldham....Athletic would get back to the Football League. After 110 minutes of thrilling football in the National League play off at Wembley, in front of 52,000, Oldham scored twice in the closing stages of  "Extra Time" (110' James Norwood and 112') to secure the club's place back in the English Football League, following a three year absence. Southend United looked as though they had the game "wrapped up", when they scored in the first minute of "Extra Time" following a 1-1 draw in normal time. Former Ipswich Town player Joe Garner (48 min) opened the scoring for Oldham Athletic, as the Latics beat Southend United in the National League promotion final yesterday.

Southend United looked as though they were on the way up instead, but ex-Independent School boy, James Norwood (110 mins) and colleague, Kian Harratt (112 mins), scored the vital goals at Wembley to  send the Greater Manchester club back to League Two, having been relegated from the Football League in 2022. They are both on Talksport as I type (4.15pm)....in Oldham talking to the Radio chaps!! Norwood is on the shoulders-left.....

The club take over by local business man Frank Rothwell helped secure the cliub 's place back "at the top"..well you know what I mean. Manager, Micky Mellon, said, "We have a great family behind us and we deserve to go up!" Playing in front of a National League match record attendance, the 52,000 fans was bigger than Monday's League Two Play Off!

Southend took the lead after 5 minutes through a Manny Monthe own goal. Oldham's, Joe Garner dispatched a penalty early in the second half and Southend sub, Parillon, nodded home at the start of Extra-time, 91 minutes. After 110 minutes, James Norwood rounded Southend keeper, Nick Hayes, tobring the sides level and two minutes later Kian Harratt (who debuted at Huddersfield Town in Dec 2019) 


James Norwood was put onto the pitch; he crossed a vicious ball into the six yard area causing pandemonium in the Oldham box, it bounced awkwardly between two defenders and the ball nestled into the bottom corner of the net. 

Born in Eastbourne, East Sussex, Norwood played for Brighton and Hove Albion and Crystal Palace youth teams. He was at St Bede's School playing for the school team and representative school teams as well as Eastbourne Town youth and for the England Schools select XI in the 2008-9 season. Later in that same season, he played for Eastbourne Town's senior side despite still being at school, making eighteen appearances for the Isthmian League club, scoring ten goals.

In April 2009, he won the English Schools FA Trophy with St Bedes. He made his debut for England Schools on 5 March, against Wales in the Carnegie Centenary Shield. In June 2009, Norwood represented England Schools again in their 4–2 defeat against France at Wembley Stadium.


Sunday, 1 June 2025

SALFORD, GRIMSBY, THE DELL, WEARSIDE, GILLINGHAM, WARSAW

Never say I don't take you round the world........ 

June 1st 2009 was the UK Premier of the Eric Cantona movie "Looking for Eric" shown at the Lowry Centre, Salford Quays, Manchester. Eric played himself and the most memorable line was "I am not a man-I am Cantona".

Two years earlier (2007), John Terry played an unusual role at the newly rebuilt Wembley, when he scored England's only goal against Brazil in front of nearly 89,000. It looked like a victory at one point but Diego equalised in "added" time. It was the first game to be played at the "new" stadium.

At the end of the 1971-2 season, when fans invaded the pitch after Grimsby Town won the Fourth Division Championship, their manager, Lawrie McMenemy, made a speech to the crowd in an attempt to restore order. As soon as Lawrie finished his speech, a lad in the crowd, threw away his crutches and cried "It's alright Lawrie, I can walk now!". The lad strutted off, others gawped at the miracle and Lawrie enveloped a "God-like aura"! 
Actually, Lawrie knew the lad and knew the child had been on the mend previously! Lawrie moved to The Dell on the south coast, from Grimsby in the Summer of 1973 and within 3 years guided the Second Division  club, Southampton, to winning the FA Cup (remember Bobby Stokes' goal v Man U?). The Saints were then promoted, were also runners up in the 1979 League Cup, he signed Kevin Keegan from Hamburg in 1980 and then his club came second in the League behind a rampant Liverpool in 1983-4. 
In 1985, Lawrie decided he had done his work at Southampton so he "jumped ship" and moved to his "north-east" and Sunderland

He did not have the success that he hoped for, despite spending money on Eric Gates, George Burley and Ray Kennedy. 
With the club, one point above the relegation zone, the local lads vandalised his gold Mercedes in March 1987 and he resigned. A month later, Sunderland lost their final league game to Barnsley 2-3 having been 2-0 up and missing a penalty. Needing a win, they then lost the relegation play-off to Gillingham and Sunderland dropped into the Third Division for the first time in history.

Also, by the way, on Tuesday June 1st 1958, Scotland played their first ever international match against Poland in Warsaw. So almost a perfect coincidence, but at least 8 of the 11 Poles had a "k" in their name and no Scot was called "Mc" or "Mac"!! The "Macs" won 1-2. A bloke with a "k" in his name scored the Poles' goal. Bobby Collins' two goals sealed the win over their hosts, with over 70,000 supporters packed into the Stadion DziesiÄ™ciolecia (try saying that then!) for the international friendly.


Saturday, 31 May 2025

KEN AND THE BATTLE OF SANTIAGO

Ken Aston, the referee, had been in charge of some controversial matches in his time, and one called the "Battle of Santiago" (below) played during the 1962 World Cup between Chile and Italy, left him with some concern about the practical management of the Laws of the Game. 


He retired from practical refereeing in 1963 following that season's FA Cup Final and was then put in charge of FIFA refereeing. In 1966 at England's World Cup tournament, the infamous quarter-final match between England and Argentina, saw Antonio Ratin, an Argentinian, sent off following "violence of the tongue", even though the German referee, could speak no Spanish and Antonio Rattin, no English. Aston had to come down from the stands, to the pitch and persuade Rattin to leave the field following an 8 minute stubborn  and confused protest. The morning after the match, both Bobby and Jack Charlton read in the newspaper that they had also pilcked a caution by the referee, but only Yellows! Their match manager, Alf Ramsey, read it too and had to clarify the situation with FIFA, just in case something happened in the following World Cup ties!

Aston  was driving home, one day, from work along Kensington High Street, when he was repeatedly stopped by traffic lights and he was giving the signals some thought, which led to him thinking, Yellow-take it easy; Red-finished; He thought that this might be the way to overcoming the problem caused by language differences in football, especially when international matches were being played and language differences were common. Ken got home and discussed it with his colleagues, when eventually the idea was accepted and introduced in the 1970 Mexico tournament with Red and Yellow cards introduced. It did not take long for the first card to be introduced and it was in the opening match of the tournament on May 31st 1970, when Evegny Lovchev of the USSR, was the first player to be cautioned with a Yellow Card and the action was clearly successful as no Reds were used during the whole tournament! Hard to believe isn't it? 

Aston, below, was asked once if any other events stood out in his life? "As a World War 2 soldier", he replied, "I suppose hanging some senior Japanese officers stands out most in my mind!"